Pandoravirus salinus
| Pandoravirus salinus | |
|---|---|
| Virus classification   | |
| (unranked): | Virus | 
| Realm: | Varidnaviria | 
| Kingdom: | Bamfordvirae | 
| Phylum: | Nucleocytoviricota | 
| Class: | Megaviricetes | 
| Order: | Algavirales (?) | 
| Family: | Pandoraviridae | 
| Genus: | Pandoravirus | 
| Species: | Pandoravirus salinus | 

Pandoravirus salinus is a large virus of genus Pandoravirus, found in the marine sediment layer of the Tunquen River in Chile, and is one of the largest viruses identified, along with Pandoravirus dulcis.[1][2] It is 2.5 million nucleobases long, encodes for about 2,500 genes, and is visible through an optical microscope. It was first identified in 2013.[1]
References

Wikispecies has information related to Pandoravirus salinus.
- ^ a b Than, K. (18 July 2013). "Jumbo viruses hint at 'fourth domain' of life". Fox News. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
- ^ Pereira Andrade, Ana Cláudia dos Santos; Victor de Miranda Boratto, Paulo; Rodrigues, Rodrigo Araújo Lima; Bastos, Talita Machado; Azevedo, Bruna Luiza; Dornas, Fábio Pio; Oliveira, Danilo Bretas; Drumond, Betânia Paiva; Kroon, Erna Geessien; Abrahão, Jônatas Santos (March 2019). Sandri-Goldin, Rozanne M. (ed.). "New Isolates of Pandoraviruses: Contribution to the Study of Replication Cycle Steps". Journal of Virology. 93 (5): e01942–18. doi:10.1128/JVI.01942-18. ISSN 0022-538X. PMC 6384056. PMID 30541841.